USA: Land of 170 Aquariums

For those keeping track at home, there will soon be no less than 8 SeaQuest Interactive Aquariums in the USA in the near future. It's amazing to think that not that long ago the franchise didn't exist! Each SeaQuest establishment will be located in a different state and some of these are already open:

SeaQuest Folsom, California
SeaQuest Littleton, Colorado
SeaQuest Trumbull, Connecticut
SeaQuest Fort Lauderdale, Florida
SeaQuest Roseville, Minnesota
SeaQuest Las Vegas, Nevada
SeaQuest Fort Worth, Texas
Seaquest Layton, Utah
 
For those keeping track at home, there will soon be no less than 8 SeaQuest Interactive Aquariums in the USA in the near future. It's amazing to think that not that long ago the franchise didn't exist! Each SeaQuest establishment will be located in a different state and some of these are already open:

SeaQuest Folsom, California
SeaQuest Littleton, Colorado
SeaQuest Trumbull, Connecticut
SeaQuest Fort Lauderdale, Florida
SeaQuest Roseville, Minnesota
SeaQuest Las Vegas, Nevada
SeaQuest Fort Worth, Texas
Seaquest Layton, Utah
Woodbridge NJ and Lynchburg VA now.
 
SeaQuest Trumbull is absolute horrid for what it's worth. I tried photographing the place, was spotted by staff, and was then escorted throughout the aquarium by a manager for the majority of the rest of my visit.

~Thylo
Any interesting species?
 
Any interesting species?

Pretty such everything's unsigned so I have to ID the fish I saw. I remember there being one cool moray but that's it. The woman escorting me around claimed it was the same species as the Green Moray but it very clearly was not. They had a lot of birds and mammals for such an aquarium in a mall.

~Thylo
 
SeaQuest Trumbull is absolute horrid for what it's worth. I tried photographing the place, was spotted by staff, and was then escorted throughout the aquarium by a manager for the majority of the rest of my visit.

~Thylo

I thought the same thing about Seaquest Roseville here in MN. It was a very strange place. Everything at these places is all targeted to get people to spend more money $$$$. The main way they do this in Roseville at least is having signs everywhere saying ask a staff member if you would like to interact with this animal. There was also an insane number of staff around for this very purpose. The weirdest part of the entire thing was the indoor "dutch" farmland. I also felt like they just took whatever animals they could get there hands on and threw them in enclosures. There were also a ridiculous amount of animals in some of the tanks. I think I counted some 20 axoltols in a tank that was maybe 10 gallons and about 10 young moray eels in another that was maybe 15 gallons at most. The place was disgusting. Right down to the future otter interactions.

Funny enough, one of my girlfriend's friends from high school is an aquarist and has worked at the Georgia Aquarium, one in Vegas, and the Great Lakes Aquarium. According to her these Seaquest places have an absolutely terrible reputation within the field, which stood in contrast to her opinion on the SEA LIFE facilities that she said are solid places.

I did get pictures of the entire place so I will have to upload them sometime.
 
I thought the same thing about Seaquest Roseville here in MN. It was a very strange place. Everything at these places is all targeted to get people to spend more money $$$$. The main way they do this in Roseville at least is having signs everywhere saying ask a staff member if you would like to interact with this animal. There was also an insane number of staff around for this very purpose. The weirdest part of the entire thing was the indoor "dutch" farmland. I also felt like they just took whatever animals they could get there hands on and threw them in enclosures. There were also a ridiculous amount of animals in some of the tanks. I think I counted some 20 axoltols in a tank that was maybe 10 gallons and about 10 young moray eels in another that was maybe 15 gallons at most. The place was disgusting. Right down to the future otter interactions.

Funny enough, one of my girlfriend's friends from high school is an aquarist and has worked at the Georgia Aquarium, one in Vegas, and the Great Lakes Aquarium. According to her these Seaquest places have an absolutely terrible reputation within the field, which stood in contrast to her opinion on the SEA LIFE facilities that she said are solid places.

I did get pictures of the entire place so I will have to upload them sometime.

Sounds pretty spot on to my visit. Random cages and pens only a few feet in length/width filled with coatis, sloths, Kinkajou, ducks, lorikeets, tortoises, iguanas, hedgehogs, leopard geckos, and even wallabies and goats! All of which you could go in and play with!

~Thylo
 
SeaQuest Trumbull is absolute horrid for what it's worth. I tried photographing the place, was spotted by staff, and was then escorted throughout the aquarium by a manager for the majority of the rest of my visit.

~Thylo

Have I understood that correctly ? The aquarium has given a watcher on your side that should pay attention during your visit that you no longer photograph the exhibits, visitor areas and aquariums? This is absolutely not prohibited in any zoo or aquarium if you do not use a flashlight.
 
Have I understood that correctly ? The aquarium has given a watcher on your side that should pay attention during your visit that you no longer photograph the exhibits, visitor areas and aquariums? This is absolutely not prohibited in any zoo or aquarium if you do not use a flashlight.

I don't know if it's still the case, but the crocodile zoo at Protivin also used to officially ban all photography, not just flash. This was made to feel even more unfair by the fact that a staff member was taking close up photos, with flash, of the animals during our visit (as a result we may not have 100% complied with the restriction...).
 
Have I understood that correctly ? The aquarium has given a watcher on your side that should pay attention during your visit that you no longer photograph the exhibits, visitor areas and aquariums? This is absolutely not prohibited in any zoo or aquarium if you do not use a flashlight.

I was still allowed to take photographs of the animals, I just had someone accompanying me for most of my visit. To be more specific, I made it about 1/3-1/2 of the way through the aquarium and was making a point to mainly photograph the horrible "exhibits", but when I reached a certain area a member of staff spotted me doing so and immediately started asking if I had any questions. Soon after, a second member of staff approached me and asked if I needed anything. Both times I had no apart from one question about the contents of a tank that was unlabeled. The whole time I was in the area at least one of the two employees kept their eyes on me. Not long after, I attempted to photograph a row of small mammal/reptile enclosures when a woman approached me claiming to be the "manager of birds and reptiles" or something to that effect. She asked me if I needed any help, but then stuck with me after I said no, instead asking me questions about my visit so far and my interests as a person. I'm pretty sure they thought I was a zoo-anti, which kind of says a lot about them that they suspect anyone photographing their facility to be an anti and have a system in check to vet them. I stuck around the area for a while because there was a lot I wanted to photograph and I figured she'd eventually leave me alone but she never did, so eventually I tried moving on and she followed me through the aquarium. I tried ending our conversation multiple times but she always started it back up again. She spent much of her time telling about how great SeaQuest were. She pointed out a couple animals they claims they rescued and she claimed they were better than traditional institutes because they allow people to get closer to the animals and give them a lot more room to roam than zoos do (they literally have multiple goats and wallabies in pens so small they can't take two steps in any direction, and they had a kookaburra in a small parrot cage). At one point she even claimed that their aquarium was better than Bronx (I was wearing a Bronx shirt at the time), saying that Bronx was bad because they keep a Jaguar in a small cage (Bronx doesn't have any Jaguars atm and there haven't been any big cat cages at the zoo since before I was born). Towards the end I started just blatantly showing that I like zoos and that I'm knowledgeable on animals, even more so than here on several instances, which eventually convinced her I was safe and she went off to do her duties. I did go back and walk around the place one more time, but was much more careful about my photography and decided not to stay too long as I didn't want to get confronted again.

This is only the second time I've been confronted by zoo staff, the first was at Space Farms in NJ. One of the owners saw me walking around with a camera and taking notes of the animals present so she came up to me and asked what I was doing. She was a little rude at first, but after I explained I was taking notes of the animals present she became nicer and didn't bother me for long.

~Thylo
 
I was still allowed to take photographs of the animals, I just had someone accompanying me for most of my visit. To be more specific, I made it about 1/3-1/2 of the way through the aquarium and was making a point to mainly photograph the horrible "exhibits", but when I reached a certain area a member of staff spotted me doing so and immediately started asking if I had any questions. Soon after, a second member of staff approached me and asked if I needed anything. Both times I had no apart from one question about the contents of a tank that was unlabeled. The whole time I was in the area at least one of the two employees kept their eyes on me. Not long after, I attempted to photograph a row of small mammal/reptile enclosures when a woman approached me claiming to be the "manager of birds and reptiles" or something to that effect. She asked me if I needed any help, but then stuck with me after I said no, instead asking me questions about my visit so far and my interests as a person. I'm pretty sure they thought I was a zoo-anti, which kind of says a lot about them that they suspect anyone photographing their facility to be an anti and have a system in check to vet them. I stuck around the area for a while because there was a lot I wanted to photograph and I figured she'd eventually leave me alone but she never did, so eventually I tried moving on and she followed me through the aquarium. I tried ending our conversation multiple times but she always started it back up again. She spent much of her time telling about how great SeaQuest were. She pointed out a couple animals they claims they rescued and she claimed they were better than traditional institutes because they allow people to get closer to the animals and give them a lot more room to roam than zoos do (they literally have multiple goats and wallabies in pens so small they can't take two steps in any direction, and they had a kookaburra in a small parrot cage). At one point she even claimed that their aquarium was better than Bronx (I was wearing a Bronx shirt at the time), saying that Bronx was bad because they keep a Jaguar in a small cage (Bronx doesn't have any Jaguars atm and there haven't been any big cat cages at the zoo since before I was born). Towards the end I started just blatantly showing that I like zoos and that I'm knowledgeable on animals, even more so than here on several instances, which eventually convinced her I was safe and she went off to do her duties. I did go back and walk around the place one more time, but was much more careful about my photography and decided not to stay too long as I didn't want to get confronted again.

This is only the second time I've been confronted by zoo staff, the first was at Space Farms in NJ. One of the owners saw me walking around with a camera and taking notes of the animals present so she came up to me and asked what I was doing. She was a little rude at first, but after I explained I was taking notes of the animals present she became nicer and didn't bother me for long.

~Thylo
What is your opinion of Space Farms, in one word?
 
According to her these Seaquest places have an absolutely terrible reputation within the field
Given your description @ThylacineAlive, I'm not surprised. Aside from the husbandry conditions, this also strikes me as a not very smart business and education model that will win over many customers. Who likes to be bothered, "fake-facted" and monitored like this? Thanks for doing "a snowleopard" for us and sacrificing yourself to warn others.

The only time something comparable has happened to me in recent times was at an art museum in an East German town. Since I was the only guest, the museum guard was tailing me aggressively from room to room - and, rather rudely I might say, demanded from me to hand over my smartphone when she thought I had taken a picture of a painting. The fact that there was no pic of a painting, but (at that time) lots of necropsy pictures (from work) on the screen made her realize that a) she was wrong and b) I might not be her normal (*enter viciously grinning emoji*) customer. Stammeringly, she retreated back into the shadowdy depths she had come from, not to be seen again - giving me plenty of time to take pictures. ^^ In the end, I couldn't refrain from visiting the museum manager's office to ask "innocently" whether it was a good idea to hire ex-Stasi employees..
 
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Honestly I'm not a big fan of Space Farms if you want my two cents.

I found most of the hoofstock and bear enclosures to be surprisingly good, better even than what you'll find at many AZA zoos. The outdoor open topped snake enclosure was cool, too. There are several meh enclosures as well, and then it takes a sharp downward spiral into some of the worst "enclosures" I've ever seen in person. The adult Kodiak Bear and baboon cages in particular struck me as absolutely horrid.

~Thylo
 
I found most of the hoofstock and bear enclosures to be surprisingly good, better even than what you'll find at many AZA zoos. The outdoor open topped snake enclosure was cool, too. There are several meh enclosures as well, and then it takes a sharp downward spiral into some of the worst "enclosures" I've ever seen in person. The adult Kodiak Bear and baboon cages in particular struck me as absolutely horrid.

~Thylo
The indoor emu shelter that looks like a construction bathroom is still there?
 
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